Typhoon eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 116 pages of information about Typhoon.

Typhoon eBook

Joseph M. Carey
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 116 pages of information about Typhoon.

It was something formidable and swift, like the sudden smashing of a vial of wrath.  It seemed to explode all round the ship with an overpowering concussion and a rush of great waters, as if an immense dam had been blown up to windward.  In an instant the men lost touch of each other.  This is the disintegrating power of a great wind:  it isolates one from one’s kind.  An earthquake, a landslip, an avalanche, overtake a man incidentally, as it were—­without passion.  A furious gale attacks him like a personal enemy, tries to grasp his limbs, fastens upon his mind, seeks to rout his very spirit out of him.

Jukes was driven away from his commander.  He fancied himself whirled a great distance through the air.  Everything disappeared—­even, for a moment, his power of thinking; but his hand had found one of the rail-stanchions.  His distress was by no means alleviated by an inclination to disbelieve the reality of this experience.  Though young, he had seen some bad weather, and had never doubted his ability to imagine the worst; but this was so much beyond his powers of fancy that it appeared incompatible with the existence of any ship whatever.  He would have been incredulous about himself in the same way, perhaps, had he not been so harassed by the necessity of exerting a wrestling effort against a force trying to tear him away from his hold.  Moreover, the conviction of not being utterly destroyed returned to him through the sensations of being half-drowned, bestially shaken, and partly choked.

It seemed to him he remained there precariously alone with the stanchion for a long, long time.  The rain poured on him, flowed, drove in sheets.  He breathed in gasps; and sometimes the water he swallowed was fresh and sometimes it was salt.  For the most part he kept his eyes shut tight, as if suspecting his sight might be destroyed in the immense flurry of the elements.  When he ventured to blink hastily, he derived some moral support from the green gleam of the starboard light shining feebly upon the flight of rain and sprays.  He was actually looking at it when its ray fell upon the uprearing sea which put it out.  He saw the head of the wave topple over, adding the mite of its crash to the tremendous uproar raging around him, and almost at the same instant the stanchion was wrenched away from his embracing arms.  After a crushing thump on his back he found himself suddenly afloat and borne upwards.  His first irresistible notion was that the whole China Sea had climbed on the bridge.  Then, more sanely, he concluded himself gone overboard.  All the time he was being tossed, flung, and rolled in great volumes of water, he kept on repeating mentally, with the utmost precipitation, the words:  “My God!  My God!  My God!  My God!”

All at once, in a revolt of misery and despair, he formed the crazy resolution to get out of that.  And he began to thresh about with his arms and legs.  But as soon as he commenced his wretched struggles he discovered that he had become somehow mixed up with a face, an oilskin coat, somebody’s boots.  He clawed ferociously all these things in turn, lost them, found them again, lost them once more, and finally was himself caught in the firm clasp of a pair of stout arms.  He returned the embrace closely round a thick solid body.  He had found his captain.

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Typhoon from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.